what do we mean by the 'civic university'? why is it important?
DESCRIPTION
Presentation by John Goddard, Newcastle University, UK, on the occasion of the EESC workshop on Universities for Europe (Brussels, 13 June 2014)TRANSCRIPT
What do we mean by the “civic university”?Why is it important?
John Goddard OBE
Emeritus Professor of Regional Development Studies
Formerly Deputy Vice Chancellor
Why the ‘Civic University’? (1)
• The on-going economic crisis is putting European governments under enormous pressure to respond to the challenges of public and private debt at the same time as global competition is intensifying.
• Local communities and taxpayers facing difficult economic situations are questioning the ‘value’ of universities, especially where the benefits may appear less obvious, e.g. in regions with high unemployment.
• Public funding for higher education is under scrutiny, compelling universities to demonstrate their value, and direct contribution and benefit to society and the economy.
Why the ‘Civic University’? (2)
• In response, universities are rethinking their role and responsibilities, and engaging in learning beyond the campus walls; in discovery which is useful beyond the academic community; and service that directly benefits the public.
• Higher education policy makers are also having to come out of their silos within national governments and work with other agencies with specific, direct and sometimes conflicting expectations of what universities are for (e.g. contributions to: innovation, skills, the arts, cities and regions)
• All of this requires institutional transformation within universities and dialogue between different parts of national governments and parts of the EC
• The ‘Civic University’ as a model to capture the mutually beneficial engagement between the community, region or wider world and the university.
What are universities for ?
• “We treat our opportunities to do research not as a public trust but as a reward for success in past studies”
• “Rewards for research are deeply tied up with the production of academic hierarchy and the relative standing of institutions” BUT
• “Public support for universities is based on the effort to educate citizens in general, to share knowledge, to distribute it as widely as possible in accord with publically articulated purposes”
Calhoun (2006) “The university and the public good”
What does this mean for the leadership and management of universities seeking to mobilise the work of the academy for public benefit?
Current business models of the university
• The entrepreneurial university model with a strengthened steering core, enhanced development periphery, a diversified funding base and stimulated academic heartland (Burton Clark 1998)
• The triple helix model of universities, business and government with semi-autonomous centres that interface with the external environment supported by specialist internal units (e.g technology transfer offices) and external intermediaries (e.g technology and innovation centres) (Etzkowitz et. al . 2000)
• Each of these models underplays the role of the arts and humanities, place based communities and civil society. This requires a new model of the civic university
• This matters because the way innovation takes place is changing
TEACHING RESEARCH
The traditional university
‘THIRD MISSION’ ACTIVITIES
Rankin
gs Excellence
Funding targets
FOCUS OF MANAGEMENT
AND LEADERSHIP
THE ‘CORE’
THE ‘PERIPHERY’
Hard Boundary between enabling
and non enabling environments
No boundary spanners
Focus on supply side, transactional interventions
Ineffective or non existent partnership
Lack of a shared understanding about the challenges
Entrepreneurs ‘locked out’ of regional planning
The neglected regional dimension
PUBLIC SECTOR
Lack of coherence between national and regional/local policies
Lack of political leadership
Lack of a shared voice and vision at the regional/local level
PRIVATE SECTOR
No coordination or representative voice with which to engage
Motivated by narrow self interest and short term goals
Dominated by firms with low demand or absorptive capacity
for innovationHIGHER EDUCATION SECTOR
Seen as ‘in’ the region but not ‘of’ the region
Policies and practices discourage engagement
Focus on rewards for academic research and
teaching
The Civic University
Enhancement
TEACHINGRESEARCH
Transformative, responsive, demand led
actions
ENGAGEMENT
Socio-economic impact
Widening participation, community work
Soft
Boundary
THE ACADEMY
SOCIETY
Generating intellectual and human capital assets for the
region
HIGHER EDUCATION SECTOR
Developing coherent policies that link territorial
development to innovation and higher education
PUBLIC SECTOR
Investing in people and ideas that will create growth
PRIVATE SECTOR
Evidence based policies that
support ‘smart’ innovation and growth
Analysis of evidence and intelligencefor planning
Building the
infrastructure
for growth
Skills development, commercialisation of research
The triple helix ‘connected’ region
10
BUT the triple helix is not enough as the way we innovate is changing
Elberfelder Farbenfabriken vorm. Friedrich Bayer & Co
Open innovation
Social innovation
Innovation in servicesUser innovation
Bell Labs, Holmdel, NJ
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Why is it different?
Different knowledge
Different entrepreneurs
Different selection mechanisms
Different ways of allocating capital and people
The quadruple helix
• “Quadruple Helix (QH), with its emphasis on broad cooperation in innovation, represents a shift towards systemic, open and user-centric innovation policy. An era of linear, top-down, expert driven development, production and services is giving way to different forms and levels of coproduction with consumers, customers and citizens.” (Arnkil, et al, 2010)
• “The shift towards social innovation also implies that the dynamics of ICT-innovation has changed. Innovation has shifted downstream and is becoming increasingly distributed; new stakeholder groups are joining the party, and combinatorial innovation is becoming an important source for rapid growth and commercial success. Continuous learning, exploration, co-creation, experimentation, collaborative demand articulation, and user contexts are becoming critical sources of knowledge for all actors in R&D & Innovation” (ISTAG 2010)
The citizen centred quadruple helix model (Arnkill et.al)
What does this mean for universities? Towards a European Network of Civic Universities
• International co-learning project with on Leading and Managing the Civic University:
• University College London and Newcastle (UK)• Amsterdam & Groningen (Netherlands)• Aalto (Helsinki) & Tampere (Finland)• Trinity College Dublin & Dublin Institute of Technology (Ireland)• Testing a conceptual model through baseline data collection, online survey
of academic staff, senior management workshops and collective roundtable• Findings to be published in an academic book hopefully to supersede
Burton Clark’s Leading and Managing the Entrepreneurial University: Organisational pathways to institutional transformation which underpins the triple helix model of university/business and government
• Contributing to a dialogue around future models of European Universities and what they are for